Welcome to the club! Nexus FTW
Are your books from iBooks and your music from iTunes? I'm not sure about the iBooks, but for kindle, nook, kobo, and overdrive books there are apps to sync your collections. I have a Mac with snow leopard, and I had to get an android file transfer program to access the Nexus's memory. You can drag and drop easily. On a windows PC, you just plug it in and go.
You can also upload your music to the cloud and access via Google play music, but I haven't gotten around to it.

Ebooks from Apple’s iBookstore are usually encrypted with Apple’s own Fairplay DRM scheme.

The only tool that removes Apple’s DRM is Requiem by Brahms. Requiem is not included in the main tools archive, and is separately maintained by its author, Brahms.

The latest version as of November 2012 is 4.1 and works with iTunes 10.6 and above, Windows and Mac OS X. Unfortunately, because of a change in the way in which it works, it no longer removes DRM from iBooks.

The last version to remove DRM from iBooks was 3.3.5 and worked with iTunes 10.5 and above, Windows and Mac OS X. I have had reports that this no longer works, but I have not verified this.

It kept giving me an error. You know, I don't have a ton of books. I'll just buy the books for the Nexus. Kinda sucks that Apple puts it's proprietary stamp on something they didn't produce. It seems that if I buy a book, I should be able to read it on any device that I own. Oh well, such is life. Thanks again, guys!

It's not Apple, it's the publishers. If I don't have an e-book in clean non-DRM epub format then I buy it from Amazon. Since the kindle software is available on all kinds of platforms, it kind of mitigates the sting of the DRM.

It's not Apple, it's the publishers. If I don't have an e-book in clean non-DRM epub format then I buy it from Amazon. Since the kindle software is available on all kinds of platforms, it kind of mitigates the sting of the DRM.

We haven't had a good Android vs. iOS debate here in a while, so I figured I'd bump this thread with an article about how an avid iPhone user (and tech writer) chose to make the switch to Android recently. This is just part 1 of 3, though, so we'll have to wait for the full story.

Having used both, iphones cant even begin to compare with newer Androids. They're not even in the same ballpark, and I firmly believe that anyone who still think iphones are better either haven't used a good Android phone or are just Apple homers.

Having used both, iphones cant even begin to compare with newer Androids. They're not even in the same ballpark, and I firmly believe that anyone who still think iphones are better either haven't used a good Android phone or are just Apple homers.

Agreed. Back in the the Froyo/GB days, Apple was clearly ahead. There were reasons for liking Android, but it was pretty rough around the edges. ICS and JB are great though.

I can't imagine having used an SIII and then being handed the latest iPhone and going, "oh, this is ****ing great." But you hear more and more the opposite. I've been surprised lately at how many SIII's and Notes I see around, especially with businessmen.

I also like the idea of being in the Google ecosystem and not Apple's. I've finally cut myself off from iTunes, and mostly from Microsoft. If I want to switch from HTC to Samsung to Nexus to whatever, it's easier as hell. Same with between Mac and PC. Even iOS and Android are easy enough to switch between as a google user, at least compared to someone invested in Apple.